Showing posts with label Blackberry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blackberry. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

BlackBerry faces questions about U.S. competitiveness


At the company's annual shareholder meeting, one investor calls the U.S. launch a "disaster." BlackBerry says it has learned its lessons from the Z10 debut.

BlackBerry investors aren't happy about its progress in the U.S., and let it be known during the company's annual shareholder meeting on Tuesday.
The company's executives fielded a number of questions -- and some not-so-veiled criticism -- about the mixed response that the new BlackBerry 10 smartphones have received in the U.S. One investor went as far as calling the U.S. launch a "disaster."
While BlackBerry CEO Thorsten Heins disagreed with that characterization, he acknowledged that the company still had a lot of work to do in the U.S.
"It's the most ferocious and competitive market in the industry," he said during the Webcast presentation.
BlackBerry's struggles are indicative of the broader challenges the company faces in introducing a wholly new mobile operating system and competing in a market dominated by Apple's iPhone and Android-powered Galaxy S phones from Samsung Electronics. It has long ceded its home market of North America, with the U.S. being particularly elusive.
Amid disappointing fiscal first-quarter results reported last month, BlackBerry posted North American sales of $761 million, well above the prior quarter, but a 4 percent decline from a year ago -- before BlackBerry 10 phones launched.
The U.S. market has been especially rough because of the control that the wireless carriers exert over the handset market. With a vast majority of smartphone sales taking place in carrier stores, giants such as Verizon Wireless and AT&T have a lot of say on the winners and losers.
BlackBerry works with the carriers on products but also competes for shelf space at their stores, Heins said. For the carriers, which have their own agenda and pressure, it's often easier to sell an iPhone or Android device than to take a risk on a new platform.
"It's hard to convince them to go where the puck is vs. where the puck will be," Heins said. "We value our relationship with the carriers, but there's some opportunistic thinking there."
A vast majority of AT&T's smartphone sales continue to go to Apple's iPhone, Heins noted.
But Heins isn't complaining to the carriers. He said that it's BlackBerry's job to convince them that BlackBerry 10 is a platform worth taking a chance on.
BlackBerry Chief Marketing Officer Frank Boulben told CNET in May that he expected a large carrier campaign to kick off in June coinciding with the launch of the BlackBerry Q10, but the carriers haven't been particularly aggressive about touting its new keyboard smartphone

BlackBerry CEO Thorsten Heins with the Z10 and Q10
Blackberry Z10 & Q10
While carrier executives tout the need for more platform choices, the sentiment appears to be different at the ground level. The same investor who called the U.S. launch a disaster also noted that retail sales representatives that he talked to were either inadequately trained or not trained to use a BlackBerry 10 device. He noted marketing materials were missing at the stores he visited.
While Heins dismissed the notion that the BlackBerry Z10 launch was a disaster, he conceded that the company learned some lessons. The company may have needed to do more training, he noted, and said the company would continue to invest in the platform and educating consumers.
Aside from the one inflammatory criticism, the shareholder meeting was generally amiable, with Heins garnering the occasional applause for his pointed answers.
He also fielded a question about the potential break-up of the company, splitting up the devices business from the enterprise service operations, with a patent-holding entity as a possible third company. Heins said he was open to anything that would create shareholder value, but would want to see the company generate some value on its own before he would entertain such a move. He added he didn't want to distract management with the prospects of such a drastic change.
Other shareholders said they preferred it if BlackBerry remained intact, eliciting some applause from the audience.
Heins on several occasions reiterated his plea for patience as BlackBerry takes a long-term view. The company is shifting toward the second phase of the company's transition, a period of investment as it sets itself up for growth for next year.
"Our transformation is ongoing and it's not going to be easy," he said.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Blackberry Launches Q5 at Low Cost

blackberry q5
Blackberry Mobile Q5

"I know this is going be a big hit," said CEO Thorsten Heins, who showed off the device at the BlackBerry Live conference in Orlando.
Heins didn't talk much about the phone's hardware, but he did show off the Q5's BlackBerry-classic QWERTY keyboard and its 3.1-inch touchscreen. The phone's design is similar to that of the once-ubiquitous BlackBerry Curve and the recently released high-end Q10 device.
The Q5 will be available in multiple colors, including black, white, red, orange and pink. It will go on sale starting in July in "selected markets" in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and Latin America. Neither Heins nor BlackBerry's press release mentioned pricing for the Q5.
BlackBerry (BBRY) is struggling to regain share lost to Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500) and Samsung in some Western markets -- namely, the United States -- but the company sees a major opportunity in countries where smartphone use hasn't yet reached saturation levels. The Q5 is aimed squarely at those regions.
Shares of BlackBerry fell 4% on Tuesday.
Related story: Inside BlackBerry's last stand
Q10 comes to America: BlackBerry did reveal more details for the U.S. launch of the Q10, which the company previewed in January. The Q10 will be available "this summer" through Verizon, T-Mobile and Sprint.
T-Mobile (TMUS) said it will offer the Q10 for $580 without any financing options starting in June. Sprint (S, Fortune 500) merely said the phone will be available in "late summer." Verizon (VZ, Fortune 500) said it will accept Q10 pre-orders "in the coming weeks" and the phone will go on sale sometime in June.
BlackBerry 10.1 coming to Z10: The company also announced that an update to its BlackBerry 10 software will be available Tuesday to users of the Z10, BlackBerry's touchscreen-only flagship smartphone. The 10.1 update includes the BlackBerry Hub messaging portal as well a handful of other improvements.
The Q10 launched in Canada and the United Kingdom with the latest BlackBerry 10.1 software already installed.  



Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Black Berry Mobile is turning to Android and iOS

Blackberry Messenger

Today at BlackBerry Live, CEO Thorsten Heins announced BBM will soon be available on Android and iOS. The messaging app will launch globally this summer. This is a huge move for BlackBerry as it brings BB10′s strongest feature to literally hundreds of millions of potential users. 

The app will be free on both Android and iOS. Much like other messaging apps, it will be a standalone application. iOS 6 or Ice Cream Sandwich will be required. Initially, only messaging and group features will be available. But Heins promised that the rest of BBM will eventually make its way to the Android and iOS versions including screen sharing, BBM voice and the just announced BBM channels.